Give LCS another play some time; it's fun, but also feels like
work,
just
like DF. Disciplines the mind, I suspect.
Sorry for the delay in getting back to you; we've had a number
of
unexpected successes in the last two weeks that have required
my
attention.
Regarding Project PM, I have pasted a more concise explanation
of
how
the
media network will work below; remember that we are also
building
up a
governing network to further advance our technocratic agenda,
thus
far
composed of about 120 people, most recently the head of
theoretical
physics
at Case Western.
Meanwhile, we are now being offered funding. A lot of
funding. I
had
originally intended on doing this with no money whatsoever,
but
anyway
the
funding is meant for something else that I will be put in
partial
charge of
and which I will explain to you further when I have more info.
Again,
very
preliminary. Whether or not this particular source of funding
comes
through
- and I think it will - I will be receiving something on the
order
of
a
quarter million dollars from another source probably within a
year,
in
which case I would be inclined to purchase a portion of your
time
to
help us
solve certain problems that I am inclined to believe that you
are
equipped
to solve.
I apologize for being cryptic at the moment, but things are
more
fun
that
way. At any rate, here is the basic schematic; feel free to
call
or
write
with any questions.
***
Information flow is fundamental to the success of every manner
of
human
collaboration. Nonetheless, the processes by which information
is
gathered,
handled, transferred, and acted upon receive far less
attention
than
is
warranted. The purpose of Project PM is to change this dynamic
by
developing
new techniques with which to more efficiently conduct
information.
Because the great preponderance of information crucial to the
success
of a
representative government is transferred through the media,
Project PM
focuses primarily on media reform. Our first and foremost
effort
has
been to
establish a distributed media cartel made up of bloggers as
well
as
journalists who work at least in part through online media.
Rather
than
simply assembling this group of exceptional media
professionals
into
an
online outlet similar to those currently in existence, we are
instead
organizing our participants into a network which itself
operates
under
a
unique schematic designed to take best advantage of the
internet
as a
medium
while simultaneously avoiding the drawbacks common to even the
best
online
communities.
In order to seed the network, we have recruited around two
dozen
bloggers
and journalists whom we have identified as particularly
competent
and
intellectually honest. Each of these individuals is encouraged
to
bring
other bloggers into the network based on their own judgment;
these
new
participants are then connected to the blogger who has brought
them in
and
may likewise bring others into the network,and so on . As
such,
the
network
grows perpetually while maintaining a high average quality in
terms of
its
participants, as is explained further below.
Upon the launch of our network, each of the initial bloggers
will
be
connected to each other via a widget which is embedded on
their
respective
blogs, as well as connected to those whom theyve recruited.
When
a
particular individual composes a piece of work that he
considers
to be
of
particular merit, the individual pushes a single button which
causes
the
article in question to be sent to all of the bloggers to whom
he
is
connected. Each of those bloggers in turn then decides whether
or
not
they
agree that the article is worthy of greater attention; if so,
they
push the
button and thereby send it along to every blogger to whom they
themselves
are connected. Thus it is that information deemed worthy of
attention
by
some great number of erudite and honest individuals from a
variety
of
backgrounds will tend to perpetuate through the system and
gain a
larger
audience than they might otherwise receive.
As the network expands by way of the process described above,
it
is
inevitable that there will be failures of judgement on the
part of
participants when choosing additional bloggers to bring into
the
network.
Let us say that Blogger X, who is rather competent, brings in
Blogger
Y, who
is only moderately so, and who in turn brings in Blogger Z,
who is
a
giant
douchebag. Blogger Z begins composing and pushing forward
posts to
the
effect that Barack Obama was born in Tehran or that ethanol
subsidies
are
awesome or some such thing but these posts only initially go
to
Blogger Y
and whatever horrid bloggers Blogger Z has brought in himself,
assuming he
has brough in any. Blogger Y may or may not be inclined to
push
forward
these nonsense posts, but Blogger X will almost certainly
delete
them
immediately and is quite likely to disolve his connection to
Blogger Y
for
displaying such poor judgement. Thus it is that the system is
defended
from
deterioration by the high competence of the initial round of
bloggers
and
consequently comparable competence of those brought in
gradually
afterwards,
coupled with the nature of the schematic itself. No
supervision is
necessary
for the network to expand while maintaining a high level of
quality.
A few other characteristics bear noting. Any participant may
connect
to
any other participant who agrees to the connection, no matter
where
each
participant resides in the network, and thus the network is
likely
to
evolve
from the shape of a pyramid to that of a web, which is
advantageous in
terms
of ensuring that good information does not become overly
regionalized. All
participants are equal regardless of the order in which they
joined.
Participants are free to bring on as many other bloggers as
they
would
like,
although they will find that it is to their own advantage to
be
selective in
this regard.
The system is capped off with another widget distinct from
that
used
by
the bloggers the reader widget, a downloadable application
which
displays
those posts which have been pushed forward a certain number of
times
(as set
by the individual reader). The end result should be the best
system of
news
and information filtration that has ever existed.
On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 4:48 AM, Tarn Adams
<tarn.adams@gmail.com>
wrote:
Thanks again for taking the time to respond to these
questions.
For
some
reason I can't get a response back from the gaming mags to
save
my
life
I'm not sure you'll do well in mainstream American print
gaming
mags.
We've pretty much never made it into them (maybe once?),
though
we do
well elsewhere and online. I'm not sure if it has to do with
the
close links between content and ads and so on, or what, since
I
only
hear the occasional story from the periphery about how it
works.
Also, I mentioned to you my eccentric project a while back,
Project
PM.
I
don't know how closely you follow these things, but my
friend
and
project
participant Michael Hastings seems to have just fucked up
all
kinds
of
shit
with his new Rolling Stone piece on McChrystal, who's now
been
summoned
to
Washington.
Yeah, I first read that on HP and then heard a telephone
interview
with him on Rachel Maddow, and of course it has been ongoing
after
that. It seems like a pretty intense scoop, and that he
really
just
needed to let the guy keep talking.
He also blurbed my book and I'm doing a piece on the
background
to all this for Vanity Fair today, so we're going to be in
a
much
better
position to act on our agenda pretty soon with the
additional
notoriety. If
you're still interested in discussing our project further
at
some
point, let
me know
I read the Africa page a few weeks ago and the last long
email
you
wrote and had been trying to find time to think and reply
intelligently, but it has been difficult. I think that since
I'm
not
involved at a practical level with this sort of activity I'd
be
sort
of wasting your time asking for basic explanations when you
are
going
to be way ahead of me on things.
As I understand it, the network would need to be
decentralized,
so
that people that were interested in, say, cooking or sports,
wouldn't
be able to co-opt any shared resources once they got in on
the
edges
and started linking in all their friends and pushing recipes
or
match
write-ups down the line. When you said the widget shows items
that
have been "pushed forward a certain number of times" it made
me
think
there was some more centralized counting going on, so that
the
top
pushed items became more universally available without having
to
make
the entire journey from one person to another. At that
point,
you'd
need to account for side networks latching on that outgrow
the
original (including a competing sub-network of the left-out
conservative bloggers, once one gets linked in on the fringe)
--
something that I imagine would be a danger if you are trying
to
write
a novel, high-quality system for passing around important
news
(which
isn't going to be limited to political news once you have
irrelevant
contributors). I'm behind on Facebook and tweets and that
kind
of
thing, so I suppose the ways around this might be obvious to
people
that are with the times, he he he. That's my paranoid first
reaction,
anyway, based on the experience of my forum getting a little
gummed
up. Maybe if the blogger network were named something that
somebody
thinking about cooking or sports didn't want to see every
time
they
open up the widget, he he he. Starting with a dozen people,
this
obviously isn't going to be a problem right away, but if the
registration/linking system is uncontrolled, you'll
eventually
get
whoever linked or whatever pushed and any mechanism not
respecting
the
locality of the direct links could become troubled.
If it doesn't have shared resources though, and whatever side
networks
that form are just living off by themselves and not jamming
up
the
network, then the overall concept would need to distinguish
itself
from email buddy lists -- I guess it might be enough to
emulate
buddy
lists with more purpose and more conveniently to achieve the
project
goals of getting information passed around quickly, but in a
completely decentralized system I'm not seeing the crucial
difference
and it makes me feel like I'm misunderstanding something
about
how it
works, unless the project is more about getting these kinds
of
themed
buddy lists organized in some standardized and easy to use
way.
Anyway, I suck at that game. [LCS]
Yeah, I only spent a few month-long sessions with it
separated by
periods of inactivity, if I remember, so it never really
gelled
as a
balanced game. The continuing fan-written LCS is probably
more
winnable without cheap tactics, but it's my understanding
that
it's
more "gamey" in a way, so I can't really say how it plays or
anything
about the atmosphere.
Tarn
--
Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302